Course: How to Teach Poetry
Lecture 12: Mentor Modeling (12 of 15)
TEACHER GOALS
- Participate in writing prompts
- Become a truthful and honest educator
- Mentor and relate to students
STUDENT GOALS
- Become comfortable sharing personal truths by listening to teachers' stories
- Exercise teacher mentality
- Practice taking charge of a lesson
TEACHER DO NOW
- Ask students to communicate as a class to create a poetry prompt for the teacher(s) to respond to
STUDENT DO NOW
- As a class, review PowerPoetry's 7 Ways to Teach Poetry Lessons with PowerPoetry to understand how to adopt a teaching role in the classroom
- Discuss with classmates the best way to go about choosing a poetry writing prompt for the teacher(s) to participate in and brainstorm a specific prompt
- Arrange classroom to create a warm, supportive, interactive space for students and teachers to communicate
MINI-LESSON/ACTIVITY
- For this lesson, the roles of students/teacher(s) will be reversed and students will be able to practice having the top authoritative role in the classroom
- For the first 20 minutes of class, students will collectively create a writing prompt for themselves and the teacher(s) to answer
- The prompt should provoke deep thought and deal with a type of personal struggle and be able to be answered using resources (Tip/Action Guides, etc.) from PowerPoetry.org
- For the next 12-15 minutes of class each individual in the classroom will write a poem in response to the prompt
- The remainder of class will be devoted to reading work aloud
- The teacher(s) will be chosen to read their work aloud ahead of the students to generate a sense of equality, truthfulness, and relatability between teacher(s) and students
SUPPLEMENTAL MATERIAL
- PowerPoetry's 7 Ways to Teach Poetry Lessons with PowerPoetry Tip Guide
HOMEWORK
- Each student will create a detailed outline for a future lesson plan using the Guide reviewed in class
PRINTABLE WORKSHEET